[ceis_seminars_phd] ERN CEIS: Centre for Economic & International Studies Working Paper Series, Vol. 17 No. 8, 10/11/2019


Cronologico Percorso di conversazione 
  • From: "Barbara Piazzi" < >
  • To: "'Barbara Piazzi'" < >
  • Subject: [ceis_seminars_phd] ERN CEIS: Centre for Economic & International Studies Working Paper Series, Vol. 17 No. 8, 10/11/2019
  • Date: Mon, 14 Oct 2019 10:37:47 +0200

Title: CEIS: Centre for Economic & International Studies Working Paper Series :: SSRN

Web Bug from https://hq.ssrn.com/journals/TrackIssueOpening.cfm?partid=342361&deliveryid=450637

if this message does not display correctly, click here

 

Table of Contents

Mariarosaria Comunale, Bank of Lithuania - Economics Department

Alberto Bucci, University of Milan - Department of Business Policy and Economics
Lorenzo Carbonari, Università di Roma "Tor Vergata"
Monia Ranalli, University of Rome III
Giovanni Trovato, University of Rome Tor Vergata - Faculty of Economics

Nicolò Fraccaroli, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Faculty of Economics, Department of Economics, Law and Institutions, Bank of England


CEIS: CENTRE FOR ECONOMIC & INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
Furio Camillo Rosati - Director

"An Investigation of the Exchange Rate Pass-Through in the Baltic States" Free Download
CEIS Working Paper No. 469

MARIAROSARIA COMUNALE, Bank of Lithuania - Economics Department
Email: ">

In this paper, we investigate the Exchange Rate Pass-Through (ERPT) to import and consumer prices in the three Baltic states. We apply reduced form equations first. Then, to look at measures of shock-dependent ERPT, we use Bayesian VARs with zero and sign restrictions and a local projection exercise, using common euro area shocks. We find that results from reduced form equations are in line with the ERPT literature. As for shock-dependent ERPTs, the magnitudes are overall bigger than in the literature in the case of import prices. They get smaller for consumer prices and even smaller if we remove energy and food prices.

"Health and Development" Free Download
CEIS Working Paper No. 470

ALBERTO BUCCI, University of Milan - Department of Business Policy and Economics
Email: ">
LORENZO CARBONARI,
Università di Roma "Tor Vergata"
Email: ">
MONIA RANALLI,
University of Rome III
Email: ">
GIOVANNI TROVATO,
University of Rome Tor Vergata - Faculty of Economics
Email: ">

In this paper we examine whether the Solow growth model is consistent with across-countries variations in standard of living once investments in education and health are explicitly and simultaneously taken into account. Using a sample of low- and middle-income economies, we provide evidence that per capita GDP is positively affected by population's health, here proxied by the life expectancy at birth. Public expenditure on health affects indirectly the level of per capita income through its positive effect on life expectancy. Using a Finite Mixture approach, we also show that richer economies are those where the impact of unobserved factors on the level of per capita income is stronger.

"Supervisory Governance, Capture and Non-Performing Loans" Free Download
CEIS Working Paper No. 471

NICOLÃ’ FRACCAROLI, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Faculty of Economics, Department of Economics, Law and Institutions, Bank of England
Email: ">

Supervisory governance is believed to affect financial stability. While the literature has identified pros and cons of having a central bank or a separate agency responsible for microprudential banking supervision, the advantages of having this task shared by both institutions have received considerably less attention in the literature. Shared supervision has however inherent benefits for the stability of the banking system, as it increases the costs of supervisory capture: capturing a single supervisor, be it the central bank or an agency, has in fact lower costs than capturing two. Nevertheless, while this argument has been proposed theoretically, it has never been tested empirically. This paper fills this void introducing a new dataset on the supervisory governance of 116 countries from 1970 to 2016. It finds that, while nonperforming loans are not significantly affected by supervisory governance per se, they are significantly lower in countries where supervision is shared and the risk of capture is high. This last result, which is robust to a number of controls and robustness checks, proves new evidence in support of the detrimental impact of shared supervision on supervisory capture.

^top


About this eJournal

Submissions

To submit your research to SSRN, sign in to the SSRN User HeadQuarters, click the My Papers link on left menu and then the Start New Submission button at top of page.

Distribution Services

If your organization is interested in increasing readership for its research by starting a Research Paper Series, or sponsoring a Subject Matter eJournal, please email: ">

Distributed by

Economics Research Network (ERN), a division of Social Science Electronic Publishing (SSEP) and Social Science Research Network (SSRN)

Directors

ECONOMICS RESEARCH CENTERS PAPERS

MICHAEL C. JENSEN
Harvard Business School, SSRN, National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI), Harvard University - Accounting & Control Unit
Email: ">

Please contact us at the above addresses with your comments, questions or suggestions for ERN-RES.

Subscription Management

You can change your journal subscriptions by logging into SSRN User HQ. If you have questions or problems with this process, please email "> or call 877-SSRNHelp (877.777.6435 or 212.448.2500). Outside of the United States, call 00+1+212+4482500.

Site Subscription Membership

Many university departments and other institutions have purchased site subscriptions covering all of the eJournals in a particular network. If you want to subscribe to any of the SSRN eJournals, you may be able to do so without charge by first checking to see if your institution currently has a site subscription.

To do this please click on any of the following URLs. Instructions for joining the site are included on these pages.

If your institution or department is not listed as a site, we would be happy to work with you to set one up. Please contact "> for more information.

Individual Membership (for those not covered by a site subscription)

Join a site subscription, request a trial subscription, or purchase a subscription within the SSRN User HeadQuarters: https://hq.ssrn.com/Subscriptions.cfm

Financial Hardship

If you are undergoing financial hardship and believe you cannot pay for an eJournal, please send a detailed explanation to ">


To ensure delivery of this eJournal, please add "> (Economics Research Network) to your email contact list. If you are missing an issue or are having any problems with your subscription, please Email "> or call 877-SSRNHELP (877.777.6435 or 585.442.8170).

FORWARDING & REDISTRIBUTION

Subscriptions to the journal are for single users. You may forward a particular eJournal issue, or an excerpt from an issue, to an individual or individuals who might be interested in it. It is a violation of copyright to redistribute this eJournal on a recurring basis to another person or persons, without the permission of SSRN. For information about individual subscriptions and site subscriptions, please contact us at ">

Copyright © 2019 Elsevier, Inc. All Rights Reserved

 



  • [ceis_seminars_phd] ERN CEIS: Centre for Economic & International Studies Working Paper Series, Vol. 17 No. 8, 10/11/2019, Barbara Piazzi

Archivio con motore MhonArc 2.6.16.

§